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Panic and Mourning The Cultural Work of Trauma PDF

297 Pages·2012·6.65 MB·English
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Panic and Mourning Culture & Conflict Edited by Isabel Capeloa Gil and Catherine Nesci Volume 1 Panic and Mourning The Cultural Work of Trauma Edited by Daniela Agostinho, Elisa Antz & Cátia Ferreira ISBN 978-3-11-028309-9 e-ISBN 978-3-11-028303-7 ISSN 2194–7104 © 2012 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data A CIP catalog record for this book has been applied for at the Library of Congress. Bibliographic information published by the Deutsche Nationalbibliothek The Deutsche Nationalbibliothek lists this publication in the Deutsche Nationalbibliografie; detailed bibliographic data are available in the Internet at http://dnb.dnb.de. © 2012 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston Cover image: Eleven Blowups #5 (detail), 2006 © Sophie Ristelhueber/adagp Paris Typesetting: fidus Publikations-Service GmbH, Nördlingen Printing: Hubert & Co. GmbH & Co. KG, Göttingen ♾ Printed on acid-free paper Printed in Germany www.degruyter.com Acknowledgements This volume is the outcome of the First Graduate Conference in Culture Studies hosted by the Research Centre for Communication and Culture at the Catholic University of Portugal, which took place on 28–29 October 2010 in Lisbon. It was organized by a group of Graduate students who had the honour and responsibil- ity of inaugurating what is becoming a solid but always refreshing practice. We would like to express our sincere gratitude to Professor Isabel Capeloa Gil, Dean of the Faculty of Human Sciences and Head of the doctoral program in Culture Studies, for encouraging with enthusiasm both the organization of the confer- ence and the publication of this book. We also wish to thank Tânia Ganito, Elisa- betta Colla and Kevin Rose for their valuable editorial assistance; and De Gruyter for taking this adventurous project on board. We are also truly grateful to the artist Sophie Ristelhueber for allowing the reproduction of one of her many mag- nificent photographs on the book cover. And finally but foremost, we are grateful to all the authors of this volume for their dedication to the project and their gen- erosity in presenting their research in this admittedly diversified volume. It was a rewarding experience to collaborate with so many brilliant authors from different fields of study. We truly hope the result is as gratifying for them as it is to us. Lisbon and Gießen, May 2012 Contents Acknowledgements   V Introduction   1 I.  Literary negotations   25 António Sousa Ribeiro A Culture of Fear: Panic, Mourning, Testimony, and the Question of Representation   27 Luisa Banki Mourning, Melancholia and Morality: W. G. Sebald’s German-Jewish Narratives   37 Milan Miljković Nostalgias and Mourning: The Nation in the Serbian Journal The Spring (1992–1996)   49 Anna Pehkoranta Negotiating Loss and Betrayal: Melancholic Ethics and Narrative Agency in Fae Myenne Ng’s Bone and Steer Toward Rock   69 Lucy Brisley Melancholic Violence and the Spectre of Failed Ideals in Gillo Pontecorvo’s The Battle of Algiers and Yasmina Khadra’s Wolf Dreams   85 II.  Visual resonances   101 Liliane Weissberg Odysseus, Rowing   103 Daniela Agostinho (Un-)Framing Triumph and Trauma: Visibility, Gender and Liberation through the Soviet Gaze   121 VIII   Contents Ban Wang The Banality of Trauma: Globalization, Migrant Labor, and Nostalgia in Fruit Chan’s Durian Durian   145 Tânia Ganito Evocations of the Unspeakable: Trauma, Silence and Mourning in Contemporary Chinese Art   161 Elisabetta Colla “Animism, Magic and the Omnipotence of Thought”: Ritualistic Artefacts and Mourning Mediation in Imperial China   181 III.  (Re-)mediated affects and performances Frederik Tygstrup Affective Spaces   195 Eduardo Cintra Torres Catastrophes in Sight and Sound   211 Diana Gonçalves From Panic to Mourning: 9/11 and the Need for Spectacle   233 David Duindam Stage, Performance, Media Event: the National Commemoration of the Second World War in the Netherlands   247 Frauke Surmann No Fun: Mourning the Loss of Tragedy in Contemporary Performance Art   263 Notes on the Editors   279 Notes on Contributors   281 Introduction ‘Panic’ and ‘mourning’ are two pivotal constructs that often emerge and interplay under circumstances of conflict, violence, crisis, and catastrophe, both natural and man-made. Whereas panic tends to crop up during the experience of violent events, mourning, on the other hand, relates to the aftermath of a brutal disrup- tion and to the way humans try to make sense of it retrospectively. Conversely, violent events can leave a thread of panic in their aftermath, while mourning can be unsettled, interrupted or even refuelled by another catastrophic incident. In the present times of worldwide upheavals, ‘panic’ has become an ines- capable keyword to convey the state of insecurity and anxiety regarding a pos- sible global collapse. Brian Massumi has described the modern experience of organised everyday fear as a “kind of background radiation saturating existence” (Massumi 1993: 24). This politically induced state of anxiety has acquired the form of sharp panic in recent years due to several historical developments, especially the turning point of 9/11 and the ensuing geopolitical reconfigurations and large- scale threats, but also the increase in disaster perception. The saturation of social spaces by this induced state of panic and the resulting production of vulnerability has to be questioned and critically addressed. Is panic a personal emotion, a rhe- torical device, or a “structure of feeling” (Williams 1961), a culturally constructed ground that constitutes social experience and shapes the formation of subjectiv- ity? Where does it come from, what are its historical configurations, and through which mechanisms is it imagined, reproduced, instrumentalised and regulated? How does it affect cultural practices, and how may it be contested and resisted? And just how does such a pulverised formation relate to mourning? Both panic and mourning can be regarded as responses to the threat of or actual loss. Indeed, the violent events that shattered the twentieth century and the turn of the twenty-first century, from the World Wars, genocides, colonial- ism, to globalisation, terrorism and natural disasters, have shaped the founda- tions of modernity and fostered academic interest in how humans respond, work through and come to terms with loss and traumatic occurrences. The resurgence of the concept of mourning in recent years is much indebted to Holocaust studies, which rehabilitated Freud’s essay on ‘Mourning and Melancholia’ (1917) to grasp a traumatic event that disrupted any sense of continuity with the world as known before. As the “founding trauma” (LaCapra 2001: 161) of the twentieth century, the Holocaust has challenged the possibility of mourning in its Freudian con- ception as “the painful, but ultimately healthy, process of severing the libidinal ties binding the mourner to the deceased” (Rae 2007: 13). Successful mourning, in Freud’s reasoning, implies “working through” grief and liberating the subject from the lost object in order for it to find a new object of attachment. When

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Panic and mourning are two distinct emotional constructs that often intersect and interplay in landscapes of conflict, violence, crisis, tragedy and catastrophe, both natural and man-made. Whereas panic tends to occur during the experience of the catastrophic events, mourning, on the other hand, rel
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